Forum of Non-governmental Organisations in Nigeria, FONGON in a solidarity March for anti-corruption war by President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja on Wednesday.

Forum of Non-governmental Organisations in Nigeria, FONGON in a solidarity March for anti-corruption war by President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja on Wednesday.

The Peoples Democratic Party Presidential Campaign Organization (PPCO) has replied the National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Adams Oshiomhole over his “once you join the APC your sins are forgiven” comment.
Speaking at APC presidential rally in Benin on Thursday, Oshiomhole had told the gathering that once you join the APC, your sins are forgiven.
But in a reaction on Friday, spokesman for the PDP Presidential Campaign, Kola Ologbondiyan, said Oshiomhole has finally exposed President Muhammadu Buhari as “patron of corruption”, dismissing the administration’s anti-corruption fight as a ruse.
Ologbondiyan, in a statement, said Oshiomhole, by his comments at the rally, has directly confirmed that the APC is a sanctuary for treasury looters and that President Buhari’s fight against corruption is mere racketeering.
He explained: “With this revelation by Oshiomhole, who is also overburdened by huge corruption allegations for which he had to flee the country last year, it is now established that the APC is a party of thieves and thrives only on deception, lies and propaganda while swimming in an ocean of corruption.
“The fact that President Buhari, who parades as Mr. Integrity, has not reprimanded Oshiomhole but openly relished the assertion, confirms his moral entanglement, accommodation and valid endorsement of corrupt practices by APC members and Presidency cabal.
“Nigerians are all witnesses to how President Buhari became an advocate for Kano State governor, Abdullahi Ganduje over the leaked tape, showing him allegedly collecting bribe from contractors.
“They have also seen how Mr. President, even as supposed Mr. Integrity, surrounds himself with corrupt persons and how most members of his Campaign Organization, as individuals, have been indicted for corruption.
“This is even more worrisome given allegations that the Buhari Presidency and the APC are directly benefiting from the funds being looted under their watch, including the N9 trillion detailed in the leaked NNPC memo; the N33 billion North East intervention fund, the repatriated $322 million stolen under the guise of sharing to the poor, the over N25 billion stolen from the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), the over N1.4 trillion stolen through sleazy subsidy regimes among others”.
The PPCO said that with that revelation by Oshiomhole, President Buhari no longer has the moral rectitude to seek re-election after he has betrayed Nigerians by failing to uphold the sanctity of the war against corruption as one of the major planks of his re-election campaign.
“Moreover, Oshiomhole and his co-travellers in his corruption roller coaster are reminded that they will soon lose their cover and definitely face trial for their atrocities as Nigerians have resolved to vote out their grand patron, President Buhari from office on February 16, 2019.
“Finally, the PPCO urges the EFCC to commence the investigation and prosecution of members of the APC campaign council as well as new entrants into their party as their factional National Chairman had already confessed that the party is a club of looters,” Ologbondiyan added.
•Rights lawyer to PENGASSAN: recover $60b for minimum wage
RIGHTS lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has urged the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) to lead workers in the fight against corruption.
He admonished the workers not to leave the battle to the government, stressing that “no government fights corruption genuinely”.
He spoke as the guest speaker at the 40th anniversary of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) in Abuja.
The theme of discussion was “Dynamic labour leadership fueling the economy”.
The legal luminary, who insisted that Nigeria was yet to get value for its oil and gas blessings, wondered why the country remains a borrower instead of being a lender to other nations.
He said peace would continue to elude the nation in as much as it has over 30 million children on the streets, stressing that the oil and gas industry remains the economic mainstay of the country that it can use to rescue the suffering citizenry.
Falana noted that in 2015, he wrote a letter directing the attention of the Federal Government to the Offshore and Inland Contract Act that said government should review the sharing contract whenever the price of crude oil exceeds $25 per barrel.
He said: “I wrote to NNPC, I wrote to the Saraki-led National Assembly . In 2016, Kachikwu confessed that $60 billion has been lost due to the non-implementation of the policy.”
The Lagos lawyer noted that Bayelsa and Akwa Ibom states challenged the non-implementation up to the Supreme Court, where it was decided in their favour on Wednesday.
He insisted that “we should collect the money. PENGASSAN should get the money for minimum wage”.
President Muhammadu Buhari, who was represented by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, said the association has played a vital role in stabilising the country.
He said the government recognised the potential of the sector to contribute to the country’s Gross Domestic Product.
He added that it was his pleasure to support the association in championing the N1.5 billion appeal fund for a digital library
Kachikwu said he was particularly grateful to the association for the support and understanding it accorded him during the increase in the pump price of petrol.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Group Managing Director (GMD), Dr. Maikanti Baru hailed the association for the maturity it exhibited during industrial disputes resolutions.
Kano State Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, in this interview with Legal Editor JOHN AUSTIN UNACHUKWU, speaks on the administration of justice, law reforms, Kano’s multi-door courthouse and continuing legal education.
Last year, Kano State partnered the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) during its Annual General Conference. You had a full session. You also made a return this year. Why?
I do appreciate the work of the judiciary, for without it, democracy will not be complete. I think it is very important for us to note this and, therefore, strengthen the judiciary and other democratic institutions. The rule of law is a very important component of a vibrant democracy and good governance which we must abide by.
Why have you shown such interest in lawyers’conferences?
Lawyers contribute a lot to democracy by guiding the executive arm of government, making sure that human rights are respected, that governmental excesses are checkmated, and that individual liberties of citizens are secured and protected. All these form basic parts of good governance, and I am committed to ensure that the rule of law thrives in Kano State and that the judiciary functions optimally.
So, what have you done to improve and strengthen judicial institutions in Kano State?
As part of my contribution in building and strengthening the judicial institutions in Kano State, I make sure that lawyers from Kano State are assisted to grow; they all participate in conferences like this. I equally encourage them to take other Continuing Legal Education programmes to sharpen and enhance their capacity to perform within the industry.
In addition, we hope to get a very good number of Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) from Kano State. Some of our lawyers will go to the Bench, while some will remain in private law practice. For now, we compete favourably in the federation; we have the highest population in the country and so, whatever profession you mention, we should strive to see that we are there in numbers and performance. That is the motivating factor behind my interest and participation in this conference. Kano State will not be left out in this effort at enhancing transition, transformation and sustainable institutions in the country.
How do you feel being part of this year’s conference?
The theme is apt, the timing is auspicious and I hope that the results and effects of the conference at the end of the day will be fantastic and advance our socio-economic and political development.
The NBA has been advocating the adoption of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 by all the states. What is Kano’s position?
We don’t have any criminal justice law in Kano State but we set up a 16-member committee chaired by the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice to look at the existing Criminal Procedure Code in the state and the new ACJA provisions with the hope that we will have a better Criminal Procedure Law combining both the old and new innovations to have the best law in the country. That is we have done. The committee has concluded its work. We now have a draft law in our hands, which has just been validated by stakeholders. The Bill is now before the state House of Assembly for passage into law.
What is unique about the bill?
In fact, other states in the northern parts of the country have started requesting for a copy because our law will be applicable, not only at the High Courts, but also in Sharia and Magistrates Courts. So, it is applicable to all the courts. You don’t have to carry different procedure laws in your bag as a lawyer practicing in the state. It is unique, very transparent and all the new innovations provided for under the new ACJA are properly covered in our draft bill, including the issue of speedy trial, transparent trial, and investigation by the police, to make sure that the incidence of torture is eliminated in the process of investigation
Most modern commercial cities are strengthening Alternative Disputes Resolution (ADR) mechanism institutions to complement the courts in resolving commercial disputes. What is the position in Kano State?
Kano State is one of the first states to establish a Multi-Door Courthouse. The purpose is to enhance and ensure alternative disputes resolution. That is their main mandate. Under our rules of courts, there is a provision which empowers judges to refer a case filed before him to the Multi-door Courthouse for settlement. He has the right to give that order and that house can attempt to settle the parties. If they succeed, they will just send their settlement terms to the court and the court will adopt same as a consent judgment instead of the long and tortuous way of litigation. Kano is one of the first states to embrace ADR after Lagos State. Apart from that Multi-door Courthouse, which is an establishment of law, we also have the Citizens Rights Department under the Kano State Ministry of Justice where ADR is being applied and people are coming in daily to resolve their disputes.
How is the department doing?
That department is doing very well and we have another plan. I gave approval to create the Office of the Public Defender (OPD) in the state because it will help the public not only in ADR, but in defending them in courts. State counsel cannot defend somebody in court, but if you have to create an agency to do this independent of the Ministry of Justice, it will help greatly in delivering justice to the people. You can see that we have done a lot along that side and even beyond that we have developed our institutions to the extent that we have improved the ease of doing business in the state. All those institutions that are responsible for the commercial activities of the state are being developed to the extent that there is no time wasted. There is optimum utilisation of all infrastructural and human resources to put the state on a fast lane in terms of the ease of doing business. An example is the land issue which we have revolutionised.
What do you mean by this?
It doesn’t take time for anybody to get his or her Certificate of Occupancy (Cof O) to do his business in Kano. It doesn’t take time to get approval for your building plan. It doesn’t take time to process whatever you have to do with the government as far as business plans are concerned. Even the judiciary is doing its own, the anti-corruption agencies are doing their own. These are things that make people afraid to invest in any given place. You can see that we have scored high. We also give concessions to those who will like to invest in Kano. We give free land to those who would like to build industries, like those who produce solar energy, we gave them free land. We give compensation to those who work round the clock to see that things work well – those who produce electricity for Kano State. We have improved our markets. With high population density in Kano, we need extra markets. Therefore, we worked with private estate developers to build what we call Kano Economic City, in which they are spending over N65billion and work has started there along Zaria Road. Many people are being employed and they are working there to produce a complete economic city for the state. That is very important.
How can the anti-corruption fight and the whistle-blowing policy be strengthened?
The anti-corruption fight is the policy of the All Progressives Congress (APC) led by President Muhammadu Buhari. Kano as of today is leading in the fight against corruption. We have succeeded in establishing a very strong anti-corruption institution in the state headed by a very senior personality. We have succeeded in building offices in all the Local Government Areas of the state so that you do not need to come to the city before you lay your complaints. In these offices, we have installed some communication equipment for easy communication with the headquarters of the anti-corruption office. Also, we have a synergy with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) through which we trained 50 people in anti-corruption fight, as well as with the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), through which we trained 25. Our staff attend international conferences in anti-corruption because of the synergy we have with the anti-corruption agencies of the Federal Government. Some commissioners in the state lost their jobs because of corruption related practices. Some permanent secretaries lost their jobs because of corruption. So, you can see that we have done a lot in the area of anti-corruption crusade. Our anti-corruption agency is an independent body and it works closely with the Federal anti-corruption agencies. This is how far we have gone in order to make sure that the agencies are working.
What would you say have been your major challenges and achievements in Kano State?
Well, first of all I thank President Buhari for doing a lot to scale down the menace of Boko Haram insurgency. We have to thank him for that because we used to get a lion share of the calamity from Boko Haram, but now, I can say that we are free from that. We are working round the clock to address the challenges of cattle rustling in the state. I had to deal with it squarely. I also had to deal with the issue of kidnapping squarely. The issue of armed robbery in Kano, I had to also deal with it squarely. Kano is now peaceful and investment is now coming into the state. That is a tremendous achievement.
Another achievement is the in the area of infrastructure development, especially road infrastructure. Kano is a mega city and a mega city is not only a city with high population density, but a city where things are working. We have studied the transportation system of the state and we found out that a lot of traffic jam, snarls and ‘go slow’ are heavily experienced within the metropolitan Kano. So, I approved the redesigning of Kano Metropolitan City on which work is about to be completed and we have been getting reports from them. We have been using part of the recommendation to see how we can introduce more road infrastructure comparable to what is obtained in any civilised city in the world. And to that extent, we have built a number of flyovers, a number of interchanges that have greatly changed the face of metropolitan Kano of which we are very proud.
What about the health sector?
Health is very important. We have been able to introduce health infrastructure and health financing. So, apart from improving infrastructural facilities, building roads and bridges, we have built new health facilities and centres. We introduced the contributory health schem – health insurance scheme which has succeeded. I am happy to state that our civil servants don’t need to carry money to the hospitals again. That is an achievement. Also, in order to reduce health and medical tourism, we were able to develop two mega hospitals with high quality state-of-the-art equipment in synergy with some teaching hospitals who are bringing their own students to Kano. Many people who were going abroad for medical treatment now come to Kano instead and we are very happy for that. We also have what we call health trust fund where 10 per cent of our Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) go to. One percent of Local Government IGR goes into that. So, we have funds which we spend in our hospital consumables.
Another critical area we have done a lot is the area of education where we have benefited a lot from the counterpart funding of the Federal Government. We have built thousands of classroom blocks in order to reduce congestion in our secondary schools. We have provided them with high grade furniture to make teaching and learning easy for our students. Our student intake has improved greatly and now we are seeking to incorporate Koranic teaching into the modern system of education without destroying the curriculum of the Islamic education. We are doing this to reduce the menace of the Almajiris on the streets of Kano. These are some of the things we are proud of.
How has your background assisted you to improve the quality of education in Kano?
My next academic qualification after secondary school is the Nigerian Certificate in Education (NCE), and then I went for Masters degree in Education and Psychology. Even my first degree was in science education and biology. So, you can see that I am familiar with what is happening in the education sector. In fact, education in Kano is no more business as usual. It is not every type of graduate that can now fit into the system. Like you know, the minimum qualification to teach even in primary school is the NCE Certificate. So, my concern is that education should be dominated by those who have certificate in education, which is why we undertook a survey in Kano State to see our teachers in the primary school which is the foundation.
What was the result?
We found that about 56 per cent of them were not qualified to teach. What we did, instead of relieving them of their job which would create a problem, was to discuss with the institutions of higher learning in the state to offer them certificate courses in education and we have succeeded in graduating about 2,000. In two months’ time we are going to graduate 25,000 of them. All of them will then be qualified and that is how we have decided to professionalise education in order to improve the quality of education in the state. We are also conscious of what happens when you have a lot of students in a classroom. They have to be decongested otherwise it negatively affects teaching and learning. It affects everything, including the concentration of the children. So, we succeeded in producing a new design especially in the cities. We have two blocks of classrooms because of the lack of space. Also, we train and retrain our teachers. We imported text books, note books. You know the feeding policy of the Federal Government, we also do our own feeding in Kano State. These are what we do to keep the children in school instead of wandering in the streets selling things in the city or in the rural areas. You can see that we have given education a lot of attention in state from our budget and we will continue to do that.
2019 is an election year. What is your advice to politicians?
What we should do as a developing country is to have political parties with ideology. Like the APC, when we started as a political party, it was an admixture of people from different groups – the good, the bad and the ugly. We actually started along that line, but now we have formed a government and the leader of our government is a person who is very honest, a person who is working very hard, who is committed to Nigeria, who loves Nigeria more than he loves himself, that is President Buhari. So, those who don’t actually belong to that line are falling out and that is good for the party.
You can see that in the long run, the APC is going to be a party with very progressive ideology and only those who think that they belong to that political inclination will remain in the party and that is good for the party. Those impurities who are not supposed to be there right from the beginning but were there because of convenience and now that they found out that the convenience is no longer there, they started to move out. I think that they have to gather in a party that has no coherent political ideology, let them be there. So, my advice to politicians is that you choose a party where you think your inclination belongs, otherwise we continue having a mixture and a political party cannot survive with a mixture. A political party will only survive when it is a compound, that is when all the elements are the same.
Ex-Abia State Governor Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu has challenged President Muhammadu Buhari to convince Nigerians of his anti- corruption war by probing former President Olusegun Obasanjo on the multi-million naira he allegedly wasted on power projects.
He said Buhari should arrest Obasanjo for Nigerians to believe he is fighting corruption.
Kalu said: “Unless Buhari arrests Obasanjo, anti-corruption war has not started.”
He spoke yesterday in Abuja while delivering a paper on the topic: ‘Culture, Economy and Good Governance: The Nigerian Experience’, at a quarterly public lecture organised by the National Institute for Cultural Orientation (NICO).
The event was held at the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution, Abuja.
Kalu dismissed his trial by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) as political, saying it was one of the consequences of his fight against Obasanjo’s third term agenda.
Said he: “I was the first governor to make his account public. That EFCC is trying me is political and it is because I fought the third time agenda of Obasanjo. If there is opportunity tomorrow to fight third term, I will fight it. If President Buhari wants to be president for life, I will never support him again. The people knew my account in Abia is open and transparent. The US, UK and China know and they give me red carpet each time I am in those countries. That is a statement of fact.
“In fact, I am stronger to fight corruption than President Buhari because he is not fighting it well. I am stronger to recoup people’s money and return it to them. I am a creator of wealth at any level from when I was in the university. If any court pronounces that I am corrupt, I should be jailed. A corrupt politician or a judge is like an armed robber.”
Kalu said restructuring had become a terminology by politicians, instead of advocating true fiscal federalism, which involved transferring responsibilities from Exclusive List to Concurrent List for effective governance and in the true spirit of a federation.
“I have lost my airline, oil block, commercial bank to the government. So, I don’t have anything to lose again. I am an activist now because I’m not afraid to say anything, as I have nothing to lose again,” he added
Kalu urged Nigerians to determine “if our national value of love for one another is propelling development or not.” According to him, “we must also decipher if our current attitude towards more progressive ethnic groups is healthy for economic development. We must get back to find out if the constant conflicts between indigenous people and settled groups are healthy for the development of the economic opportunities, which abound in our cultures.
“Has the herdsmen/farmers conflict helped to grow investment in agriculture? Has it attracted any foreign investor to the sector? Will it attract any? How does our attitude towards settler ethnic communities help us to grow our local economy?”
Plateau State Governor Simon Lalong has praised the Federal Government on the anti-corruption war.
He said successes recorded so far must be sustained.
Lalong, who spoke while welcoming President Muhammadu Buhari on a working visit to the state, said more still needed to be done.
“As a state, we have since keyed into this patriotic endeavour by lodging complaints with the relevant agencies, such as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) against several cases of corruption by some past government officials,” he said.
Lalong, a lawyer, said in an effort to end the growing security challenges his administration met, the Plateau Peace Building Agency was launched.
“It is the first of its kind to be adopted by any state government in Nigeria. The function of the Peace Building Agency is to foster Peace through mutual cooperation and understanding with a view to ensuring amicable resolution of conflicts as well as the harmonious co-existence of all citizens, regardless of ethnic, religious and political backgrounds.
“The Plateau Peace Building agency has developed a Five-Year Strategic Plan, through a carefully facilitated benchmarking
“Plateau State has had its fair share experience of violent conflict, which also took a massive toll on the socio-economic development of the state.
“The impact of this horrific experience in terms of both human and material loss has been quite devastating and profound. More than seven thousand lives were lost, with homes, livelihoods and communities destroyed in a period spanning over a decade,” Lalong said.
According to the governor, the pattern of state and Federal responses to conflicts in the past were at best reactionary, often revolving between the setting up of commissions of inquiry and wide range of ad-hoc security arrangements meant to restore law and order.
“While this approach may have yielded some short-term results during the conflict, it has failed to arrest the vicious cycle of violence that had become the persistent plight of our people for over 15 years,” he said.
He said the Plateau Peace Building Agency’s Five-Year Strategic Plan came about through a carefully facilitated benchmarking exercise that harnessed the contributions of stakeholders.
“Through the implementation of this strategic framework we hope to maintain a steady progress in our journey from fragile to stable peace.
“Consequently, we are compelled to humbly request for intervention from, and collaborative partnerships with, the Federal Government that will assist the state through the Peace Building Agency to fully implement the conflict transformation and peace building activities.
“To complement and support the efforts of security agencies, government has procured 53 security vehicles equipped with communication gadgets for distribution to all the 17 local government areas,” he said.
Addressing the President, Lalong added: “One of the major highlights of your official visit to Plateau, therefore, is to unveil this strategic document in view of its potential for peace and security in our state and across Nigeria.”

I commend those behind the formation of the Anti-Corruption Situation Room (ACSR). I understand they include civil society organisations, media groups and government agencies.
The essence, I am told, is not just to promote transparency and accountability in government but also to ensure that the people take ownership of the fight against corruption.
For us in government, this is music to our ears. Music to our ears because we have been saying that the fight against corruption is not Buhari’s fight, neither is it APC’s fight.
It is Nigeria’s fight. This means all Nigerians must take possession of this war if we are to win it. The courageous and patriotic minds behind the Anti-Corruption Situation Room have taken the first critical step to ensure that Nigerians buy into this war.
I thank the Human and Environmental Development Agenda (HEDA Resource Centre) and its partners for coming up with the ACSR. I appeal to more civil society organizations to join this initiative. Unless there is a collaboration that involves the government, the media, CSOs and others, this fight will be tougher than it should be.
Mr. Olanrewju Suraju, Chairman of HEDA Resource Centre, puts it most succinctly when he said, and I quote: “The central thrust is to build synergy between anti-corruption CSOs, the labor movement and law enforcement agencies, the parliament and the judiciary as a means of improving and broadening the anti-corruption agenda as well as creating an accountability loop and feedback mechanism between anti-corruption agencies, the civil society organizations and the citizens”.
The ACSR could not have come at a better time. The Buhari Administration’s fight against corruption is gaining momentum, and the government is winning the war. But there is a challenge: there seems to be a feeling of numbness among the citizens about the conduct of those whose actions brought us here, those who looted the national treasury dry.
Suddenly, these same people are engaging in revisionist history and blaming everyone but themselves for the mess their actions put the country into.
Those who turned our treasury to their piggy bank are once again presenting themselves as the saviours of the nation. They say the best time for Nigeria was when the proceeds of their corruption subsidized many and gave the illusion of economic boom.
They are so emboldened as to say Nigerians are earnestly yearning for them. No contrition. No apologies. No shame. Just sheer bravado. Unbridled arrogance. Revisionism.
The civil society, the media and indeed all Nigerians owe it a duty not to allow Nigerians to forget, to say ‘Never Again’ to those who view Nigeria as nothing but a cash cow to be milked to death.
How can we ever forget? The 2.1 billion dollars meant to buy weapons for the Nigerian military to fight Boko Haram was turned into a slush fund by a few, causing the war to fester and hundreds of troops to die. How can we ever forget that we spent billions of dollars on power only to have just 2,690 megawatts, which was what we inherited when we assumed office 29 May 2015?
Why is it that despite the billions of naira supposedly spent on roads by successive administrations, what we inherited are death traps. Why did we inherit an economy in dire straits? Nigeria sold oil at over 100 dollars per barrel for years, but the proceeds were either looted or frittered away.
Yet, this Administration has decided to take the bull by the horns, rather than sit back and lament. That is why we are fighting corruption headlong. It is the toughest of the three cardinal programmes of this administration, but we are determined to win the fight, and we are winning, even when corruption is fighting back fast and furious.
Because we are tackling corruption, we have succeeded in raising power generation from 2,690 to an all-time high of 7,001MW. Because we are tackling corruption, we are saving 25 billion Naira monthly by cutting unnecessary allowances of officials.
Because we are tackling corruption, we have added 500 million dollars to our Sovereign Wealth Fund that stagnated at the 1-billion-dollar that was used to set it up.
We have raised our foreign reserves from 23 billion dollars to 38 billion dollars. We have stopped the payment of phantom subsidy of between 800 billion and 1.3 trillion Naira.
We recovered at least 43 million dollars and 56 houses from just one official of the immediate past administration. We have recovered 2.9 billion dollars from looters so far. Our Whistle-blower policy has led to the recovery of 151 million dollars and N8 billion in looted funds from just three sources.
Our sincere and full implementation of the Treasury Single Account, or TSA, has yielded 3 trillion naira, almost half of the estimated revenue in the 2018 budget. With the elimination of thousands of ghost workers, we have saved 120 billion naira.
We have eliminated the 108 billion naira in maintenance fees payable to banks, pre-TSA.
We can go on and on, reeling out the successes from our fight against corruption.
It is noteworthy that we have achieved all these and more without having all the stakeholders fully on board in the fight against corruption. Imagine how far we would have gone if all hands have been on deck.
That is why we are delighted at the launch of the Anti-Corruption Situation Room, which we believe will definitely ensure that more and more Nigerians buy into this war.
Once Nigerians take possession of the war, there will be no more hiding place for the corrupt. Those accusing the administration of engaging in a selective anti-corruption fight will be exposed for who they are: apologists for treasury looters!
I congratulate the various groups that have come together to form the ACSR. It is our fervent hope that this will be a game changer in the efforts to ensure that Nigerians take possession of the war against corruption, thus galvanizing the anti-corruption war.

Governor Mohammed Abubakar of Bauchi State has called for a change of attitude in the fight against corruption.
He said corruption had hampered the country’s growth and development since it gained independence from Britain in 1960.
According to him, the fight against corruption is everybody’s responsibility and not only that of public officers.
The governor made this call at the opening of a two-day anti-corruption summit for state political appointees and public service officers.
It was organised by the state government in collaboration with the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).
Abubakar stated that one of the cardinal principles of his administration is “bringing about change in all the transactions of government and doing away with corrupt tendencies which have been impacting negatively on our society.”
He said: “We will do everything possible to promote zero tolerance for corruption in the civil service, to ensure effective service delivery to the people.”
These measures, according to him, were the appointment of a recovery committee which recovered properties and money carted away by some officials of the immediate past administration as well as the another committee which reviewed major contracts awarded by the last administration in some ministries, departments and agencies.
He added: “Other measures introduced included the staff verification exercise that blocked leakages in government finances and closing unnecessary accounts, all of which were meant to ensure discipline in the system and promote good governance.
Abubakar stated that such occasions are avenues for the promotion of high moral values in the society as well as promoting excellence in public service.
He appreciated the support given to the state government by the ICPC, EFCC and Code of Conduct Bureau, “whose duty is to ensure transparency and accountability.”
The governor commended the three anti-graft agencies for “ensuring prudence and financial discipline” in the system and called on them to sustain that support to the end of the tenure of his administration.
He revealed that the state government has started implementing an Integrated Financial Management Information System that is meant to improve financial and budget management and reporting system, which is to be implemented in phases.
He urged the management staff, civil servants and public officers of the ministries, departments and agencies to cooperate with the government’s development partners and coordinating team to see to the realisation of the project.
Some Nigerians have reacted to the recent reinstatement of the former Chairman of Presidential Committee on Pension Reform Taskforce Team (PRTT), Abdulrasheed Maina, into the federal civil service, saying the development is victory over corruption and age-long pervasion of the civil service rules and labour laws.
It could be recalled that Maina while fighting corruption in the pension sector through the PRTT in 2010 recovered over 200 billion Naira in cash but, as some Nigerians put it, “in the process, the hunter became the hunted as corruption forth back and was sacked illegally.”
It could also be recalled that Maina led PRTT recovered 1.6 trillion Naira both in cash and assets within a period of one year. However, as the Coordinator of the North Central Youth Leaders Forum, Hon Alfa Nma said in his reaction to Maina’s reinstatement, “some corrupt pension looters ganged up against Maina and he was framed to be corrupt. “Maina’ car was shot on his way from the Presidential Villa since then, Maina went into hiding. “So, who will not run away when it has become obvious that people are after your life?”‘ Hon. Nma said. He recalled that Senator Kabir Gaya who earlier accused Maina of stealing 195 billion Naira soon renounced his accusation when he declared that the said money was found to be lodged in the federal government’s account, which is part of the TSA of the Buhari’s administration. The group, the North Central Youth Leaders Forum, had earlier called on President Buhari to sustain the anti corruption war, urging him that while fighting corruption, he should look into the files of those fighting corruption in the previous administration and were framed up. According to the group, the advice was with a view to determining the merit or otherwise of some cases to not only clear them but also to make them part of the anti corruption war as in the case of Maina. Mr. Ibrahim Kuru who spoke from Kaduna noted that the reinstatement of Maina is a victory over corruption, saying that “it would be a victory for the corrupt people in the system if obvious cases of people who were framed up for doing the right thing were not looked into. On his part, Comrade Okpokwu Ogenyi who spoke from Abuja hailed Maina’s reinstatement, saying it is a plus for the anti corruption war of the President Buhari administration.
According to Dr. Mohammed Ardo, a retired civil servant civil servant , “any reasonable person would commend President Buhari for righting the wrongs of the past by reiterating Maina”.Also, in his reaction, the Chairman Federal Concerned Pensioners, Mr David Audu who spoke from Lagos said that President Buhari has rekindled the hope of Nigerians who suffered injustice, noting that unjust acts of the past administration can be corrected by Maina’s reinstatement.
He said, ” a bunch of clueless people will sit at your homes and operate on hearsay, even when they do not have a copy of the civil service rules.
“You don’t jump into conclusions and engage in a smear campaign on a man who has done nothing to offend you.
“People are not just sacked or dismissed if they are not political appointees.
“If you are a career civil servant, there are rules and processes to follow and it was obvious that the process that led to the sack of Maina was flawed and the President should be commended”, Mr Audu said.
One of the constitutional amendments that Nigerians have been clamouring for is the separation of the office of attorney-general from the position of minister of justice. For many citizens, the continuous lumping together of the portfolio of attorney general with the minister of justice, a politician, will never improve the administration of justice in the land, strip it of all political encumbrances and in the end and make justice delivery truly blind.
Typically, the 8th Senate, a parliament that has earned the notoriety of representing the people only by nomenclature, spectacularly failed the people yet again by voting against that item. Anyway, who expects a Senate that draws a sizable portion of its membership from politicians running from justice to pass such a fundamental law? Yes, this Senate has been reduced to a safe sanctuary for allegedly corrupt former governors, and some ‘crooked’ politicians and businessmen that can only make the day in court for any professional attorney general, not a politician appointed as minister of justice!
In no other place has the tenuous relationship and contradictions inherent in the continuous merging of the office of the attorney general with a politically biased minister of justice inhibiting the administration of justice than the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC. Naturally, the EFCC as a commission reports to the Attorney General and Minister of Justice. The history of the relationship between the EFCC and its supervisory authority has not been what was envisaged by its founders.
Instead, this relationship has been characterized by power play, intrigues and clash of interests. Except for the pioneer chairman, Nuhu Ribadu, no other chairman of EFCC, has enjoyed the relative independence of the commission, devoid of the hot breath of the supervisory authority down its shoulders. Even in his wee hours as chairman – when the government that appointed him left office – Ribadu was being subjected to the daily scrutiny of the attorney general who was pursuing his own political interests. Ask Ibrahim Lamorde and Mrs. Farida Waziri, they probably would not have nice things to say about their working relationship with Mohammed Adoke and Michael Aondoakaa, respectively.
This background is perhaps necessary to locate the trajectory of the Special Assistant to the President on Prosecution, Okoi Obono-Obla. The previous week, Obono-Obla, as reported in the media accused the acting chairman of the EFCC, Ibrahim Magu, and the ICPC chairman, Ekpo Nta, of insubordination. Specifically, he alleged that the two heads of anti-corruption agencies had refused to submit to the attorney general (or is it his National Committee on Prosecution), the case files of more than 35 high profile former governors and senators under their investigation.
Obono-Obla who clearly came across as a proxy of the attorney general not only suggested reporting the EFCC and ICPC chairmen to the Presidency but equally threatened sanctions against them. Even more troubling is the introduction of subtle blackmail in Obono-Obla’s tone by suggesting that the non-submission of the files by the ant-corruption agencies “caused a setback to the anti-graft campaign of the federal government” and had led to the loss of some high-profile cases in court recently.
It is reassuring that Obono-Obla, being a critical stakeholder, is worried about the flagging of the anti-corruption war of the Buhari government. Obono-Obla was appointed by a President who wants his fight against corruption to succeed perhaps more than any other policy. The President rightly or wrongly sees the EFCC as presently constituted perfectly suited to lead the onslaught against corruption. That is why despite the rejection of Ibrahim Magu by the Senate on two occasions, President Buhari insisted that the EFCC chairman remains his only choice to head the anti-corruption agency.
The earlier, aides of President Buhari understand this position and work towards cooperating rather than weakening the choice of the President at EFCC, the better for all of us in terms of winning this war against a well-fortified enemy. It is interesting to note that the week Obono-Obla, on behalf of the attorney general, lashed out at Magu requesting for more than 35 files from the EFCC, was the same week the Senate voted against splitting the office of the attorney general from the minister of justice; it was the same week that the Senate within a record one week passed the National Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) Act into law seeking to remove it from the EFCC.
More than anything else, the dirty politics within the executive arm apparently to force Ibrahim Magu out of the EFCC, for whatever reason, is responsible for the loss of steam in the fight against corruption. While it is all too easy to blame the Senate for truncating Magu’s confirmation, the Department of State Security, (DSS) provided the fuel with which the Senate used in lynching him.
Now, the attorney general, using Obono-Obla as a proxy, is literally asking for the keys to the EFFC building because that is what submitting the requested files means. Yes, EFCC must report to the attorney general and seek clarifications where there are doubts but this whole idea of requesting for the files of high profile politicians under investigation triggers something quite ominous in the land. The last attorney general who made similar demands on the EFCC was Michael Aondoakaa under the presidency of Umar Musa Yar’Adua.
By the time Aondoakaa finished with his abracadabra, Chief James Ibori, the former governor of Delta State, had escaped justice in Nigeria only to be convicted in a foreign country to the shame of our judiciary and the EFCC. Granted, the attorney general and Obono-Obla may have noble reasons for requesting EFCC to hand over files of high profile politicians under investigation for prosecution, but can they vouch for everyone in their team including their own staff that information will not be traded this time around? And mind you, in two years’ time, another general election is due and politicians are getting ever so desperate.
There is no doubt that Obono-Obla is passionate about fighting corruption and wants successful prosecution of suspects in court. Indeed, he publicly speaks forcefully about this. Yet sometimes without knowing it, we sabotage the very projects we pursue with our own hands. Obono-Obla has been here and everywhere throwing his weight around; he is constantly getting on the nerves of his colleague lawyers who disagree with his viewpoint; he goes about castigating judges for taking sides with ‘corrupt people’ in explaining some of the losses the government has suffered in the courts. If he thinks this attitude helps in the anti-corruption war, he is dead wrong.
What will help though is to use his committee to strengthen the EFCC; not by making himself a willing tool in an orchestrated plan that may end up undermining EFCC operations.